FreeBSD Man Pages

CNW(4) FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual CNW(4)
NAMEcnw -- Netwave AirSurfer wireless network driver
SYNOPSISdevicecnwDESCRIPTION
The cnw interface provides access to a theoretical 1Mb/s wireless Ether-
net network based on the Netwave AirSurfer Wireless LAN (formerly known
as the Xircom Netwave Wireless LAN).
Note that the driver does not support newer devices such as the Netwave
AirSurfer ``Plus'', or the BayStack 650/660. These devices are supported
by the awi(4) driver.
Netwave devices are not compatible with IEEE 802.11 wireless networks.
Also note that there are Netwave devices with different wireless fre-
quency, depending on the radio band plan in each country.
The card uses 36K of I/O memory mapped to the card. You may need to
increase memory space available to the PC Card controller. See pccard(4)
for details.
In use, the cards appear to achieve up to a 420Kb/s transfer rate, though
a transfer rate between 250Kb/s and 350Kb/s is typical.
The card operates in the 2.4GHz frequency range and is subject to inter-
ference from microwaves, IEEE 802.11 wireless network devices, as well as
earth. For example, it seems that IEEE 802.11 channel 14 conflicts with
Netwave (US frequency). They interfere with each other if they are both
operated in the same geographic region, causing weird packet loss. You
may be able to avoid the interference with IEEE 802.11 devices, by chang-
ing the IEEE 802.11 channel.
HARDWARE
Cards supported by the cnw driver include:
+o Xircom CreditCard Netwave
+o NetWave AirSurfer
DIAGNOSTICScnw0:can'tmapmemory Indicates that the driver was not able to allo-
cate enough PC Card bus address space into which to map the device. See
pccard(4) and increase memory available to the PC Card controller.
SEE ALSOarp(4), awi(4), inet(4), intro(4), pccard(4)HISTORY
The cnw driver was ported from NetBSD by Hiroyuki Aizu
<aizu@jaist.ac.jp>. It first appeared in NetBSD 1.4. The first FreeBSD
release to include it was FreeBSD 5.0. This manual page was adopted from
NetBSD by Christian Brueffer <brueffer@FreeBSD.org>.
FreeBSD 10.1 September 5, 2004 FreeBSD 10.1